BBÖ Class 114

BBÖ 114DRB 12.1
Number(s) BBÖ 114.01DRB 12 101
Quantity 1
Year(s) of manufacture 1929
Retired 1953
Wheel arrangement 2-8-4
Axle arrangement 1'D2' h3
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Length over buffers 22.613 m
Height 4.650 m
Wheelbase 6,210 mm
Overall wheelbase 12,635 mm
Wheelbase incl. tender 19,403 mm
Service weight 117.2 t
Adhesive weight 70.2 t
Top speed 100 km/h
Driving wheel diameter 1,940 mm
Leading wheel diameter 1,034 mm
Trailing wheel diameter 1,034 mm
Cylinder bore 530 mm
Piston stroke 720 mm
Boiler Overpressure 15 bar
No. of heating tubes 151
No. of smoke tubes 38
Grate area 4.72 m2
Radiative heating area 18.70 m2
Superheater area 91.00 m2
Evaporative heating area 262.00 m2
Tender 84
Water capacity 29.50 m3
Fuel 8.0 t coal

The Class BBÖ 114.01 locomotive was an Austrian express train steam locomotive.

At the same time as plans were developed for the two-cylinder Class 214, design emerged in the Wiener Neustädter Lokomotivfabrik for a three-cylinder engine. In order to be able to compare the two designs it was decided to build a prototype of each one. Number 114.01 was built in the Wiener Neustädter Lokomotivfabrik and delivered in 1929.

In general the advantage of three-cylinder locomotives lies in their more powerful torque and a better balance of the rotating masses, which leads to lower wear and tear. The disadvantage is a higher fuel consumption due to the three steam engines. This was true in the case of 114.01 which in comparison with locomotive 214.01 had a 9% higher consumption of coal. Difficult access to the inside gear and the associated poor maintainability of locomotive 114.01, combined with the fact that 214.01 did better in the trial runs, led to the 214s going into series production. Number 114.01 remained in service with the BBÖ as a one-off. A visible difference from the 214s is the visible parts of the unusual Marshall valve gear with its rotating camshaft.

In 1938 the Deutsche Reichsbahn redesignated this locomotive as number 12 101.

Number 114.01 was employed on the locomotive schedules (Umlaufplan) of the 214s and, amongst other things, was allowed to head the first Arlberg Orient Express after the Second World War. In 1948 it was converted to oil-firing due to the shortage of coal. On 6 August 1949 the middle cylinder broke. Due to the irreparable damage the locomotive was sidelined and dismantled in 1953.

See also

References

    • Schröpfer, Heribert (1989). Triebfahrzeuge österreichischer Eisenbahnen – Dampflokomotiven BBÖ und ÖBB. Düsseldorf: alba. ISBN 3-87094-110-3. 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.